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Syria / Putin isn’t done yet with the Middle East
Politics / Is Humza Yousaf picking a fight with GB News?
Crime / Stop idolising Luigi Mangione
Exhibitions / Warhol, Rauschenberg, Johns and Tinguely all started out as window dressers
From the magazineBooks / Wagner’s Ring is a mythic mishmash
From the magazineNo offence / The sad demise of the scathing school report
From Spectator LifeOsaka / Red lights and shinto rites
From Spectator LifeSweet success / The mystery of Baileys
From Spectator LifeCrime / Stop idolising Luigi Mangione
Exhibitions / Warhol, Rauschenberg, Johns and Tinguely all started out as window dressers
From the magazineBooks / Wagner’s Ring is a mythic mishmash
From the magazineNo offence / The sad demise of the scathing school report
From Spectator LifeOsaka / Red lights and shinto rites
From Spectator LifeSweet success / The mystery of Baileys
From Spectator LifeLatest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
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Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
The mystery of Baileys
From Spectator LifeWhy are Brits such bad neighbours?
From Spectator LifeDoes Starmer hate music?
From Spectator LifeStop messing with my Negroni
From Spectator LifeThe sad demise of the scathing school report
From Spectator LifeAs the first term of the school year draws to a close, pupils’ reports will soon be landing, encrypted and password-protected, on parents’ smartphones. But once they’ve finally managed to open them to find how little Amelia or Noah has been performing, there will be another code for them to crack: what on earth the
Red lights and shinto rites in Osaka
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
World War Twee
The hideous triviality of our times
World war twee: the hideous triviality of our times
I remember the moment I first understood that we, the British, had a national character. It was in the mid-1970s and my family and I were watching a clip from an American TV show which was being shown to us by ITV for a giggle. It was a celebration of the love between mothers and
World war twee: the hideous triviality of our times
I remember the moment I first understood that we, the British, had a national character. It was in the mid-1970s and my family and I were watching a clip from an American TV show which was being shown to us by ITV for a giggle. It was a celebration of the love between mothers and
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
‘Was I cast because you couldn’t get anyone else?’ Cate Blanchett discusses Rumours
At last, a film about the G7. There have been more movies than you can shake a stick at set in the Oval Office and No. 10 and other citadels. But not once has cinema gathered democracy’s prime septet in the same frame, the way the annual Group of Seven summit does. Until Rumours. ‘Did
Warhol, Rauschenberg, Johns and Tinguely all started out as window dressers
From the magazine‘La Scala was maddening’: an interview with John Macfarlane, the finest set designer of his generation
From the magazineThis Muslim playwright believes Yorkshire is headed for civil war
From the magazineSpellbinding: Herbert Blomstedt’s Mahler 9 reviewed
From the magazineThe latest Dragon Age game is unbearably right-on
From the magazineDune: Prophecy is much worse than you will believe possible
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘A few inappropriate remarks and it was back to waiting tables.’’
Cartoon
‘‘I’m continually surprised by what goes viral.’’
Cartoon
Cartoon